Donovan's Estate

28 Pa. D. & C. 93, 1937 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 346
CourtPennsylvania Orphans' Court, Philadelphia County
DecidedFebruary 11, 1937
Docketno. 239
StatusPublished

This text of 28 Pa. D. & C. 93 (Donovan's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Orphans' Court, Philadelphia County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Donovan's Estate, 28 Pa. D. & C. 93, 1937 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 346 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1937).

Opinions

Bok, J.,

— This is the companion case to Carwithen’s Estate, 28 D. & C. 66, in which an opinion has been filed simultaneously with this one.

We have decided to grant the petition for a declaratory judgment for the same reasons as are set forth in the Carwithen case, and the general question here is the same, save that we are dealing with the word “securities” and must interpret a different will.

William E. Donovan died on October 29, 1908, leaving a will dated July 13, 1908, whereby, after making various specific legacies to members of his family, he provided for three trusts. The first was $10,000 for the benefit of his sister, Louise Donovan, for her life, and the second was $5,000 for the benefit of Anna R. Leberman for her life, the principal to fall into residue after the death of the life tenants. The pertinent wording is the same in. each of these two trusts. It reads:

[94]*94“In Trust, to invest, reinvest and keep invested the principal thereof in safe, sound and substantial securities, without confining them to technical legal securities”, etc.

Donovan then left the residue of his estate in trust for the benefit of his wife for life, and after her death to pay the income in equal shares to his three daughters for their lives, the issue of a deceased daughter to take the parent’s share of income, and, on the death of the last surviving daughter, to pay the principal per stirpes to living issue. The pertinent wording of this trust is as follows:

“In Trust, to invest, reinvest and keep invested the principal thereof in safe, sound and substantial securities, according to their best judgment and discretion, without confining my said trustees to what are technically known as legal investments”, etc.

It appears from the record that the widow died on September 23,1933. We are not asked to construe the wording of the trusts in favor of Louise Donovan and Anna R. Leberman, and have not been informed whether these trusts are still effective; as the principal falls into residue after the life estates, it will ultimately be subject to our ruling on the wording of the residuary trust.

The parties in interest directly affected by these proceedings are three daughters, one of whom has children. Possible unborn children are represented by a guardian ad litem.

It appears that Donovan died leaving certain real estate and a personal estate worth about $384,000. The personal estate consisted of $293,123.33 in cash, the business of C. Moore & Co., of which decedent was proprietor, valued at $71,510.34, and the balance composed of various kinds of stock in an English or Canadian linen thread company, 50 shares of a Philadelphia trust company, 1,000 shares in a worthless Colorado milling and tunnel company, and the surrender value of several fire insurance policies.

[95]*95The wording of the will shows a clear intention to provide for testator’s immediate family. This system of distribution is in itself a mandate so to invest the funds as to achieve a secure principal and an income commensurate with it. Testator gives his trustees full discretion and relieves them of the necessity of investing in legáis: they are not to be confined to what are “technically” known as legal investments. We feel that this frees them completely from the provisions of the act.

Testator has made a positive direction that his trustees shall invest in “safe, sound and substantial securities”. Coupled with discretion given them, the words “safe, sound and substantial” emphasize the duty to observe the established rule of due care and prudence in making whatever investments the will as a whole and the law permit them to make.

The will says that they may invest in “securities”, and we are asked to decide whether this word includes common and preferred stocks.

In the trusts to his sister Louise and Anna Leberman testator’s wording is identical, but it differs slightly from that relating to the residuary trust. The difference occurs in the phrasing following the words “without confining them”; in the two smaller trusts the sequence is, “technical legal securities”, and in the residuary trust it is, “to what are technically known as legal investments”. In our opinion the latter phrase is an amplification of the former, an effort to be even more specific in the case of the largest and final trust, and does not indicate a different intention. As the two smaller trusts are to fall into the residue and become part of the residuary trust, it is unlikely that testator intended that his trustees, who are the same in all three trusts, should be freer in their management of the two small trusts than of the residuary trust. We read the wording of the three trusts together, in order to determine testator’s general intent as to the investment powers which he meant his trustees to have.

[96]*96When the man in the street speaks of his securities he means his stocks as well as his bonds. The definition of the word “security” in Webster’s New International Dictionary (2d ed.) is sufficient authority for this:

“An evidence of debt or of property, as a bond, stock certificate, or other instrument, etc.; a document giving the holder the right to demand and receive property not in his possession.” (Italics ours.)

Our Supreme Court has used the word in this sense in so many cases that we need cite only a few as examples. (All italics are ours.)

In Barton’s Estate, 1 Pars. Sel. Eq. Cas. 24, decided in 1842, the court said:

“. . . the Schuylkill Bank stock and Lehigh loan were securities selected by the testatrix herself, being part of the very estate which came into the possession of the trustee as her executor.”

In Pray’s Appeals, 34 Pa. 100, the court referred to Barton’s Estate, supra, saying:

“There, at the time of the investment, the stock and loans were valuable paying securities”.

In Stewart’s Appeal, 110 Pa. 410, the court said:

“We see no reason for surcharging the accountant with the loss sustained in the sale of the Pennsylvania and Reading Railroad stock. They were securities which the testator had himself purchased and held up to the time of his death. They were both dividend-paying securities and so continued for several years after the testator’s death.”

In Brown’s Estate, 287 Pa. 499, 502, involving the right of trustees to retain stocks, the court says: “They need not rush into a conversion of the securities left by the decedent.”

In Crawford’s Estate, 293 Pa. 570 (1928), testatrix directed her trustees to set aside and hold a fund “out of stocks and bonds belonging to me at their market value at the time of my death”, in trust for her granddaughter. The late Justice Walling said, page 575:

[97]*97“As the testatrix provided these specific securities to form the trusts, it is of no importance that they are not what is known as legal securities. The terms of the will protect the trustees. Where the will expressly directs the executors to set up trusts out of nonlegal securities held, by the testator, the rule stated in Taylor’s Est., 277 Pa. 518, against trustees investing in such securities, is not applicable. See Detre’s Estate, 273 Pa. 341. The estate has a large amount of securities in addition to those called for in items five and six.”

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28 Pa. D. & C. 93, 1937 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 346, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donovans-estate-paorphctphilad-1937.